| 公開號 | US7342441 B2 | | 出版類型 | 授權 | | 申請書編號 | 11/418,118 | | 發佈日期 | 2008年3月11日 | | 申請日期 | 2006年5月5日 | | 優先權日期 | 2006年5月5日 | | 其他公開專利號 | EP2022166A1, US20070259641, WO2007130102A1 | | 公開號 | 11418118, 418118, US 7342441 B2, US 7342441B2, US-B2-7342441, US7342441 B2, US7342441B2 | | 發明人 | Mark Davidson, Jonathan Gorrell | | 原專利權人 | Virgin Islands Microsystems, Inc. | | 專利引用 (100), 非專利引用 (96), 被以下專利引用 (2), 分類 (12) | | |
| 外部連結: 美國專利商標局, 美國專利商標局專利轉讓訊息, 歐洲專利局 | |
Heterodyne receiver array using resonant structures US 7342441 B2 An electronic receiver array for decoding data encoded into electromagnetic radiation (e.g., light) is described. The light is received at an ultra-small resonant structure. The resonant structure generates an electric field in response to the incident light and light received from a local oscillator. An electron beam passing near the resonant structure is altered on at least one characteristic as a result of the electric field. Data is encoded into the light by a characteristic that is seen in the electric field during resonance and therefore in the electron beam as it passes the electric field. Alterations in the electron beam are thus correlated to data values encoded into the light.
1. A receiver array to spatially demodulate a modulated signal from electromagnetic radiation, comprising:
at least one local oscillator providing locally generated electromagnetic radiation; and
plural receivers, each of said plural receivers comprising:
an input for receiving remotely generated electromagnetic radiation corresponding to the modulated signal;
a resonant structure adjacent to, but not directly in, the path of a passing charged particle beam that receives at least a portion of the remotely and locally generated electromagnetic radiation and resonates at a frequency that is a function of the frequencies of the locally and remotely generated electromagnetic radiation; and
at least one charged particle absorption element receiving at least a portion of the charged beam as a function of the frequencies of the locally and remotely generated electromagnetic radiation such that the modulated signal can be extracted from the remotely generated electromagnetic radiation.
2. The receiver according to claim 1 wherein the resonant structure is a rectangular shape or a C shape.
3. The receiver according to claim 1 wherein the resonant structure is a shape having a relatively small face to the charged particle beam relative to the total perimeter of the resonant structure.
4. The receiver according to claim 3 wherein the resonant structure is triangular and a point of the triangle is facing the charged particle beam.
5. The receiver according to claim 1 wherein the resonant structure is a shape that concentrates an electric field induced by the electromagnetic radiation near the passing charged particle beam.
6. The receiver according to claim 1, further including:
a detector to detect whether the electrode is receiving at least the portion of the charged particle beam.
7. The receiver according to claim 1, further including:
a detector to detect which of the first and second charged particle absorption elements is receiving the charged particle beam.
8. The receiver according to claim 1 wherein the first charged particle absorption element is a Faraday cup and the second charged particle absorption element is an electrode.
9. The receiver according to claim 1, further including a source of electrons such that a beam of electrons acts as the beam of charged particles.
10. The receiver according to claim 1, wherein the resonant structure has a dimension smaller than the wavelength of the electromagnetic radiation.
11. The receiver according to claim 1, wherein the at least one local oscillator comprises an ultra-small resonant structure.
12. The receiver according to claim 1, wherein the at least one local oscillator comprises a variable oscillator tuned to a selected frequency.
13. The receiver according to claim 1, wherein the at least one local oscillator comprises one of plural selectively-controlled local oscillators.
14. The receiver according to claim 1, wherein the at least one local oscillator comprises one of plural selectively-activated ultra-small resonant structure selected by at least one deflector.
15. A method of spatially demodulating a modulated signal from electromagnetic radiation, comprising:
receiving locally generated electromagnetic radiation from at least one local oscillator; and
demodulating the modulated signal at plural receivers, the demodulating comprising:
receiving remotely generated electromagnetic radiation corresponding to the modulated signal;
receiving, at a resonant structure adjacent to, but not directly in, the path of a passing charged particle beam, at least a portion of the remotely and locally generated electromagnetic radiation;
resonating the resonant structure at a frequency that is a function of the frequencies of the locally and remotely generated electromagnetic radiation; and
receiving, at least one charged particle absorption element, at least a portion of the charged beam as a function of the frequencies of the locally and remotely generated electromagnetic radiation such that the modulated signal can be extracted from the remotely generated electromagnetic radiation.
16. The method of demodulating according to claim 15 wherein the resonant structure is a rectangular shape or a C shape.
17. The method of demodulating according to claim 15 wherein the resonant structure is a shape having a relatively small face to the charged particle beam relative to the total perimeter of the resonant structure.
18. The method of demodulating according to claim 15 wherein the resonant structure is a shape that concentrates an electric field induced by the electromagnetic radiation near the passing charged particle beam.
19. The method of demodulating according to claim 15, further including detecting which of the first and second charged particle absorption elements is receiving the charged particle beam.
20. The method of demodulating according to claim 15, wherein the at least one local oscillator comprises an ultra-small resonant structure.
21. The method of demodulating according to claim 15, wherein the at least one local oscillator comprises one of plural selectively-activated ultra-small resonant structure selected by a deflector.
COPYRIGHT NOTICE A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material which is subject to copyright or mask work protection. The copyright or mask work owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright or mask work rights whatsoever.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS The present invention is related to the following co-pending U.S. patent applications which are all commonly owned with the present application, the entire contents of each of which are incorporated herein by reference:
-
- 1. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/238,991, entitled “Ultra-Small Resonating Charged Particle Beam Modulator,” filed Sep. 30, 2005;
- 2. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/917,511, entitled “Patterning Thin Metal Film by Dry Reactive Ion Etching,” filed on Aug. 13, 2004;
- 3. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/203,407, entitled “Method Of Patterning Ultra-Small Structures,” filed on Aug. 15, 2005;
- 4. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/243,476, entitled “Structures And Methods For Coupling Energy From An Electromagnetic Wave,” filed on Oct. 5, 2005;
- 5. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/243,477, entitled “Electron beam induced resonance,” filed on Oct. 5, 2005;
- 6. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/325,448, entitled “Selectable Frequency Light Emitter from Single Metal Layer,” filed Jan. 5, 2006;
- 7. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/325,432, entitled, “Matrix Array Display,” filed Jan. 5, 2006;
- 8. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/302,471, entitled “Coupled Nano-Resonating Energy Emitting Structures,” filed Dec. 14, 2005;
- 9. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/325,571, entitled “Switching Micro-resonant Structures by Modulating a Beam of Charged Particles,” filed Jan. 5, 2006;
- 10. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/325,534, entitled “Switching Microresonant Structures Using at Least One Director,” filed Jan. 5, 2006;
- 11. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/350,812, entitled “Conductive Polymers for Electroplating,” filed Feb. 10, 2006;
- 12. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/349,963, entitled “Method and Structure for Coupling Two Microcircuits,” filed Feb. 9, 2006;
- 13. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/353,208, entitled “Electron Beam Induced Resonance,” filed Feb. 14, 2006;
- 14. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/400,280, entitled “Resonant Detectors for Optical Signals,” filed Apr. 10, 2006;
- 15. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/410,924, entitled “Selectable Frequency EMR Emitter,” filed Apr. 26, 2006;
- 16. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/411,129, entitled “Micro Free Electron Laser (FEL),” filed Apr. 26, 2006; and
- 17. U.S. application Ser. No. 11/418,088, entitled “Heterodyne Receiver Using Resonant Structures,” filed herewith.
FIELD OF THE DISCLOSURE This relates in general to an array of receivers for detecting electromagnetic signals and in particular to an array of resonant structures detecting encoded electromagnetic signals in the present of at least one local oscillator.
INTRODUCTION It is not a simple task to modulate a light beam into an electron beam. Due to the size and dispersion of photons in the light beam and the size and dispersion of electrons in the electron beam the two rarely intersect, physically, even when the light beam and electron beam are directly crossed. There have been some physicists who have employed large scale lasers to intersect an electron beam and detected occasional scattered electron patterns caused by a few of the electrons in the beam physically intersecting with photons in the laser beam. But, the scale of such devices is large and their efficiency is poor.
In the related applications described above, micro- and nano-resonant structures are described that react in now-predictable manners when an electron beam is passed in their proximity. We have seen, for example, that the very small structures described in those applications allow energy of the electron beam to be converted into the energy of electromagnetic radiation (light) when the electron beam passes nearby. When the electron beam passes near the structure, it excites synchronized oscillations of the electrons in the structure (surface plasmons) and/or electrons in the beam. As often repeated as the many electrons in a beam pass, these surface plasmons result in reemission of detectable photons as electromagnetic radiation (EMR).
As would be appreciated by those of skill in the art, an information signal to be transmitted may be encoded on or mixed with a carrier signal prior to transmission. The mixed signal can then transport the information signal at an extremely fast data rate. Further, using resonant structures of the types described in the related applications, the transmitter can be built into a chip and used to transmit the data within a microcircuit (intra-chip) or between one or more microcircuits of one or more chips. A number of methods of encoding such data can be envisioned and is not delimiting of the inventions described herein.
We herein disclose methods and structures for receiving the encoded EMR, and decoding it to retrieve the original data. In one embodiment described herein, a receiver array utilizes heterodyne mixing techniques and a local source of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) to extract an original information signal at plural locations.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is a schematic view of an encoder and decoder system;
FIG. 2 is an alternative resonant structure for a receiver;
FIGS. 3 and 4 are schematic representations of a portion of a resonant structure decoding binary “LO” and binary “HI” signals, respectively;
FIG. 5 is a perspective view of two resonant structures for a receiver;
FIG. 6 is a non-empirical, non-experimental representation of the theoretical absorption versus wavelength for a structure such as in FIG. 5;
FIG. 7 is an alternative example receiver;
FIG. 8 is an alternative example receiver;
FIG. 9 is an alternative example receiver;
FIG. 10 is an alternative example receiver;
FIG. 11 is an alternative example receiver;
FIG. 12 is an alternative example receiver;
FIG. 13 is an alternative example receiver;
FIG. 14 is an example secondary electron shield on an example receiver;
FIG. 15 is an example amplitude-modulated receiver;
FIG. 16 is an example secondary detector;
FIG. 17 is a close-up view of a portion of the secondary detector of FIG. 16;
FIG. 18 is a representation of experimental results from a resonant receiver structure;
FIG. 19 is a representation of experimental results from a resonant receiver structure;
FIG. 20 is a block diagram of the general components of a heterodyne receiver;
FIG. 21 is a block diagram of an exemplary heterodyne receiver according to the present invention;
FIGS. 22 a-22 c are block diagrams of a multi-frequency heterodyne receiver according to the present invention;
FIG. 23 is a block diagram of an exemplary multi-frequency heterodyne receiver using a variable oscillator according to the present invention;
FIG. 24 is a block diagram of an array of receivers for receiving an original information signal at plural locations;
FIG. 25 is a block diagram of a matrix of receivers for receiving an original information signal at plural locations;
FIG. 26 is a block diagram of a multi-frequency matrix of receivers for receiving a multi-frequency original information signal at plural locations; and
FIG. 27 is a block diagram of a multi-frequency matrix of receivers for receiving a multi-frequency original information signal at plural locations including infra-red images.
THE PRESENTLY PREFERRED EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS A transmitter 1 can include an ultra-small resonant structure, such as any one described in U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 11/238,991; 11/243,476; 11/243,477; 11/325,448; 11/325,432; 11/302,471; 11/325,571; 11/325,534; 11/349,963; and/or 11/353,208 (each of which is identified more particularly above). The resonant structures in the transmitter can be manufactured in accordance with any of U.S. application Ser. Nos. 10/917,511; 11/350,812; or 11/203,407 (each of which is identified more particularly above) or in other ways. Their sizes and dimensions can be selected in accordance with the principles described in those applications and, for the sake of brevity, will not be repeated herein. The contents of the applications described above are assumed to be known to the reader.
Although less advantageous than the ultra-small resonant structures identified in the applications described above, alternatively the transmitter 1 can also comprise any macroscopic or microscopic light emitter, and can include even prior art LEDs, semiconductors or other light-emitting devices.
The transmitter 1 is operated in association with a data source 18, which may be part of the transmitter or may be separated from the transmitter 1 (the former embodiment is shown in FIG. 1). For purposes of this disclosure, the kind of data transmitted, the kind of EMR produced, and the kind of structure producing the EMR are not delimiting. It matters only that in some way data are encoded into an EMR beam. In the embodiment of FIG. 1, the data source 18 supplies data to a light encoder 17 that encodes the data into the light beam, and transmits encoded light 15 to the receiver 10.
In the example of FIG. 1, the receiver 10 includes cathode 20, anode 19, optional energy anode 23, ultra-small resonant structures 12, Faraday cup or other receiving electrode 14, electrode 24, and differential current detector 16. The status of the receiver 10 will now be described in the case where the receiver 10 is not being stimulated by encoded light 15. In such a case, the cathode 20 produces an electron beam 13, which is steered and focused by anode 19 and accelerated by energy anode 23. The electron beam 13 is directed to pass close to but not touching one or more ultra-small resonant structures 12. In this sense, the beam needs to be only proximate enough to the ultra-small resonant structures 12 to invoke detectable electron beam modifications, as will be described in greater detail below. These resonant structures in the receiver 10 can be, by way of example, one of those described in U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 11/238,991; 11/243,476; 11/243,477; 11/325,448; 11/325,432; 11/302,471; 11/325,571; 11/325,534; 11/349,963; and/or 11/353,208 (each of which is identified more particularly above). The resonant structures in the receiver 10 can be manufactured in accordance with any of U.S. application Ser. Nos. 10/917,511; 11/350,812; or 11/203,407 (each of which is identified more particularly above) or in other ways.
As the term is used herein, the structures are considered ultra-small when they embody at least one dimension that is smaller than the wavelength of visible light. The ultra-small structures are employed in a vacuum environment. Methods of evacuating the environment where the beam 13 passes by the structures 12 can be selected from known evacuation methods.
After the anode 19, the electron beam 13 passes energy anode 23, which further accelerates the electrons in known fashion. When the resonant structures 12 are not receiving the encoded light 15, then the electron beam 13 passes by the resonant structures 12 with the structures 12 having no significant effect on the path of the electron beam 13. The electron beam 13 thus follows, in general, the path 13 b. In the embodiment of FIG. 1, the electron beam 13 proceeds past the structures 12 and is received by a Faraday cup or other detector electrode 14. As is well-known, the Faraday cup will receive and absorb the electron beam 13. In alternative embodiments, the path of the electron beam can be altered even when the encoded light 15 is not being received at the resonant structures, provided the path of the electron beam 13 is identifiable with the absence of the encoded light 15.
Next, we describe the situation when the encoded light 15 is induced on the resonant structures 12. Like the earlier scenario, the cathode 20 produces the electron beam 13, which is directed by the current anode 19 and energy anode 23, past the resonant structures 12. In this case, however, the encoded light 15 is inducing surface plasmons to resonate on the resonant structures 12. The ability of the encoded light 15 to induce the surface plasmons is described in one or more of the above applications and is not repeated herein. The electron beam 13 is impacted by the surface plasmon effect causing the electron beam to steer away from path 13 b (into the Faraday cup) and into alternative path 13 a or 13 c. Note that the dimensions in FIG. 1 are not to scale—the amount of deflection of the electron beam may be exaggerated in FIG. 1 to illustrate the principle. The size of the Faraday cup or other detector electrode 14 is selected so the deflected electron beam on path 13 a/13 b misses the Faraday cup and instead is received at the electrode 24. Differential current detector 16 detects when the electron beam 13 is impacting the electrode 24 by detecting a differential current between the Faraday cup or other detector electrode 14 and the electrode 24. Alternative methods of detecting the deflected electron beam other than the Faraday cup and electrode will be recognizable to the artisan who understands from this description the structure and purpose of the receiver 10.
Many alternative structures and arrangements are available for the various components shown in FIG. 1. For example, resonant structures 12 can appear on one side of the electron beam 13, as shown, or may appear on both sides of the electron beam 13 so the electron beam path is impacted by resonant structures as it passes between them. An example such structure is shown in FIG. 2. There, the resonant structures are no longer rectangular shaped (the structures could conceivably be any shape), but are instead triangular. The triangular shape may be preferable in altering the passing electron beam 13 due to concentration of the electromagnetic fields in the tips of the triangles as the surface plasmons are excited by the incident light 15.
As is generally known, the encoded light 15 will not interact with the electron beam directly. That is, the electrons in the beam are so small and so dispersed and the photons of the light 15 are small and dispersed that practical interaction between them is essentially a statistical non-existence. The general belief is that direct transfer of the information in the encoded light 15 with the highly dispersed electron beam is impractical if not impossible. Although the encoded light 15 cannot be reliably transferred to the electronic structures of the receiver 10 by simple interaction of the light 15 with the electron beam 13, we have provided a receiver that “holds” the information in the light on the resonant structures 12 via the activity of the surface plasmons long enough for the electron beam 13 passing by to interact with light 15 and couple the data content. The information encoded in the light 15 is thus coupled onto the electron beam 13 (and thus to electronic circuit elements) when it was previously considered impossible to do so.
The light 15 can be encoded with the data from the data source 18 in a variety of ways, but one example way is now described. The light 15 can be encoded by pulses, such that a light “OFF” condition indicates a binary “0” bit condition from the data source 18 and a light “ON” condition indicates a binary “1” bit condition from the data source 18. The encoded light 15 sent to the receiver is then a set of pulses indicating binary data information. The response of the receiver resonant structures 21 is illustrated in FIGS. 3 and 4.
In FIGS. 3 and 4, for simplicity we illustrate only one of the resonant structures 21, but the artisan will recognize from the disclosure with respect to FIGS. 1 and 2 that more than one such structure can be presented in the receiver 10. FIG. 3 illustrates the electron beam 13 passing by the resonant structure 21 when the encoded light 15 is “OFF,” i.e., a “0” binary bit condition from the data source 18. As shown, the lack of incident light from the encoded light beam 15 (an “off pulse”) produces no appreciable effect between the resonant structure 21 and the passing electron beam 13. Accordingly, the electron beam 13 passing generally straight along path 13 b and into the Faraday cup or other detector electrode 14.
FIG. 4 illustrates the electron beam 13 passing by the resonant structure 21 when the encoded light 15 is “ON,” i.e., a “1” binary bit condition from the data source 18. In this case, the light 15 is incident to the resonant structure 21. The resonant structure 21 responds to the light 15 with the surface plasmons moving on the surface 25 and creating a focused electric field at the tip of the triangular structure 21. The electric field causes the passing electron 13 to alter its otherwise straight path to the alternative path 13 a. As described earlier, the path 13 a takes the electron beam past the Faraday cup or other detector electrode 14 and onto the electrode 24, where the electron beam is detected by the differential current detector 16. Alternatively to directing the electron beam to one of the paths 13 a or 13 c, the path of the deflected electron beam 13 could be a scattering along multiple paths including paths 13 a and 13 c, as the resonating effect of the light 15 on the structures 21 changes the electric field at the tip. In such a case, using the embodiment of FIG. 1, the altered paths will each miss the detector 14 and thus the resonance on the structure 21 will still cause the electrons to meet the electrode 24 rather than the electrode 14.
As described, the “ON” condition of the light 15 is reflected in a detection of a current difference in the differential current detector 16 caused by the deflection of the electron beam 13 into the electrode 24 rather than the detector electrode 14. A pulse “OFF” condition of the light 15 is reflected in a detection of a different differential current value in the differential current detector 16 when the electron beam 13 is directed straight into the Faraday cup or other detector electrode 14.
Recognizing now how the receiver 10 can decode the “0” and “1” conditions, the artisan can readily appreciate how the encoder 17 can encode the data from the data source 18 by pulsing the light on for one of the binary conditions and off for the other of the binary conditions.
In general, a resonant structure 12 and/or 21 will respond most effectively to a particular frequency of light. In a preferred arrangement, the transmitter transmits light at a particular wavelength and the resonant structures 12 and 21 have geometries that respond to that wavelength. FIG. 6 illustrates the general principle (it is not reflective of any actual test) that ultra-small structures of particular geometries, such as those shown in FIG. 5 (showing height, width, depth and periodicity of resonant structures) will demonstrate absorption rates peaking at multiples of a particular wavelength. Those absorption rates will correlate to the strength of the electric fields produced at the points of the triangle resonant structures 21 or other-shaped structures 12, and thus will correlate to the effect that the light 15 has on the passing electron beam 13. The present receiver 10 is not limited to any particular resonant structure shape (many example shapes are described in the related patent applications identified above), but should preferably (though not necessarily) have one dimension smaller than the wavelength of the photon to be produced.
For any given structure, the wavelength characteristics shown in FIG. 6 can be ascertained for any given structure by empirically testing the structure. Applying light of varying frequencies and measuring the absorption characteristics leads to a kind of the graph of FIG. 6 for any particular structure type, size, and periodicity. Once the characteristic frequency of absorption is ascertained, it can either be adjusted to the frequency of the encoded light 15, or the encoded light 15 can be adjusted in frequency to that of the receiver 10. An estimate of the frequency response can be calculated as well.
One example empirical graph is shown in FIG. 18 where the Y-axis represents counts of electrons detected versus finger length (i.e., the long dimension of resonant structure. The resultant peaks illustrate optimal finger lengths for the particular light frequency and can be used to shape the geometry of the resonant structures to optimally couple the light beam 15.
FIGS. 7-13 illustrate different forms of receivers that provide the same mechanism of decoding of the encoded light 15. In FIG. 7, the electrode 14 a corresponds to the electrode 14 in FIG. 1, except that the shape is flatter. FIG. 7 illustrates the broader principle that the shape, size and characteristics of all of the electrodes shown can be modified from the ones described and shown herein and still accomplish the intended decoding.
In FIG. 8, two additional alternative design principles are embodied. First, the order of encounter of the electrodes can be altered; namely the “straight path” electrode 30 for the OFF condition can appear to the electron beam 13 after passing the “altered path” electrode 14 b/24 a for the ON condition. In this embodiment, the electrodes 14 b and 24 a can be separate electrodes electrically connected to the detector 16, or they can be one doughnut-shaped electrode with the hole in the center providing the path for the electron beam 13 to pass when it is not be diverted. FIG. 8 also illustrates the alternative principle that the detector 16 need not detect the current difference between the ON and OFF electrodes, but can instead detect change in current in the ON electrode(s). In that instance, the OFF electrode (in the case of FIG. 8 the electrode 30) takes the electron beam to ground (or may capture it with a Faraday cup and employ it for power requirements of the electric circuits).
FIG. 9 illustrates a detector in which the detector 16 detects current conditions on the OFF electrode 14 c and compares it to ground. It could alternatively do the same for the ON electrode (instead or in addition to the OFF electrode).
FIG. 10 illustrates the ON electrodes 14 b/24 a taking the electron beam to ground and the OFF electrode 30 providing the detector 16 with a signal referenced to ground whenever the electron beam follows the non-deflected path 13 b.
FIG. 11 illustrates basically side-by-side electrodes 24 and 14 b. As shown, electrode 14 b slightly extends into the straight-line path 13 b so the OFF condition is detected by it. Electrode 24 is positioned to capture the electron beam when it is deflected to the 13 a path in the ON condition.
In earlier embodiments, we described the detector referenced from an ON electrode to an OFF electrode, from and ON electrode to ground, and from and OFF electrode to ground. In FIG. 12 we illustrate detectors that provide improved sensitivity and noise-reduction by referencing the received electron beam to the cathode. In FIG. 12, the principle of the detector referenced to an electric characteristic of the cathode is shown. Although not limiting, the example embodiment shows the OFF electrode 14 a receiving the OFF path 13 b and the ON electrode 24 receiving the ON paths 13 a and 13 c. In generally, when the electron beam follows the path 13 b, the detector receives the beam and references it to an electrical characteristic that it receives from the cathode (or another element associated with the electron beam source). In that way, noise associated with the electron beam source can be cancelled. The OFF electrode can be grounded, Faraday cupped, etc. The ON electrode 24 is electrically coupled to the detector 16. Inside detector 16 is a current detector 28 that measures the current between the cathode 20 and anode 19. In operation, when the electron beam is deflected to the electrode 24, the current in that electrode 24 is detected by the detector 16 (and then diverted ground, a Faraday cup, etc.) and referenced to the current detected by detector 28 such that noise in the electron beam source can be cancelled, improving detection sensitivity.
One way that that noise can corrupt the decoding process is by stray electrons bouncing from the receiving electrode (either the ON or OFF electrode) rather than being captured thereby. The shield 29 a/29 b in FIGS. 13 and 14 illustrate an example option that can reduce the strays. Specifically, it is advantageous to keep stray electrons out of the area where the electron beam 13 (either deflected or non-deflected) will be traveling to avoid collisions between the stray electrons and the electrons in the beam 13. The shields 29 a and 29 b are grounded and sit in front of (relative to the beam path) the detector being employed in order to provide the stray electrons another “to-ground” attraction before they enter the area where the electron beam 13 is traveling. The shields 29 a and 29 b can be employed with any type of detector (for example, any of FIGS. 7-12).
FIGS. 16 and 17 describe an optional electrode structure that will also better capture the electrons in the electron beam 13, thereby reducing the possibility of stray electrons returning “up-stream” and interfering with the electron beam 13. In FIG. 16, the electrode 60 (which can be any of the electrode embodiments earlier described) is in the structural form of a baffle such that approaching electrons in the beam 13 have a multiple chance of being absorbed. In FIG. 16, only the OFF electrode 60 is shown with the baffles, but the ON detector electrode 61 can also (or instead) be baffled. The baffles are more particularly shown in FIG. 17, where the electron beam 13 x is shown bouncing (instead of being absorbed) on the electrode 60 and yet then being absorbed on the second encounter with the electrode 60 (after the bounce). This improves signal detection and signal-to-noise ratio, and reduces the possibility of stray electrons re-entering the area where the electron beam 13 is encountering the resonant structures 12.
FIG. 15 illustrates an AM (amplitude demodulation) detector based on the above-described detector principles. As shown, the cathode, anode, and resonant structures of, for example FIG. 1, are combined into the box “Charge Source and Resonant Structures” but basically operate according to the principles outlined in FIG. 1. In this case, however, the encoded light 15 contains data from the data source 18 that is modulated with more than two binary conditions. Thus, the encoded light invokes the electric field in the resonant structures in accordance with a characteristic of the light (for example, intensity, frequency, polarity, etc.) such that the electric field in the resonant structures bears an amplitude relation to the light characteristic. The data from the data source 18 can then be encoded by the light characteristic such that greater than two data states—and indeed within the limits of practicality, infinite data states can be amplitude modulated on the data source.
Once the light characteristic is encoded, the resonant structures encountering that light 15 respond by electric field amplitude changes in accordance with the light characteristic. The electron beam 13 passing close to the resonant structures couple that amplitude characteristic and deflect at an angle commensurate with the amplitude modulation. Thus, high amplitude modulation can result in the beam diversion to path 46 and onto electrodes 32/37, where it is detected by detector portion 45. Lesser amplitudes result in beam path diversions to paths 47, 48, and 49, respectively encountering electrodes 33/38, 34/39 and 35/40 and detector portions 44, 43, and 42. No diversion (i.e., a “0” amplitude state) results in no diversion of the beam path 13 and thus a path 50 into electrode 36 detected by detector portion 41. It can thus be seen that “analog” differences in light characteristic can be detected by amplitude demodulation. The sensitivity of the data can be adjusted based on the number and size of the electrodes 32-40. By adding more electrodes, a greater number of differentiated amplitude increments can be detected and thus greater data volume can be encoded;
FIG. 19 illustrates a graph of percent reflectivity (Y-axis) versus wavelength of light measured in nm (X-axis). In the experiment, different length ultra-small resonant structures were arranged on a substrate and light of different frequencies and polarities was directed near the structures. The different curves represent the degrees of polarization of the light (in 45 degree increments) relative to the long dimension of the finger length. The percent reflectivity in this experiment indicates the percent of reflection off of a surface with a resonant structure versus a surface without one, thus indicating inversely the amount of light energy absorbed by one or more of the ultra-small resonant structures located on the substrate. The dominant “dips” in the graph illustrate wavelengths of the light that were absorbed well by one or more of the resonant structures at the polarity shown. Other light frequencies and finger lengths could be mapped and used as alternatives. The graph is significant to show that the resonant structures are in fact absorbing the encoded light energy. The graph is also significant in illustrating the effect of polarization angle on the absorption. In essence, the graph illustrates that absorption occurs and that it is enhanced when polarization of the light is parallel to the finger length. The graphs for polarization angles 0 and 180 show large absorption at the dips and for angles 90 and 270, for example show lower absorption.
From FIG. 19, one can ascertain various light characteristics that can be employed for linear (or non-linear) amplitude modulation employed by, for example, the structure of FIG. 15. Light intensity of the encoded light 15 affects electric field strength produced in the resonant structures 12 and thus can be used to angularly modulate the beam path. So too can changes in polarization and light frequency, such that they too can be used to encode the data on the light 15 to produce a corresponding path alteration in the electron beam 13 at the receiver 10.
As shown in FIG. 20, a heterodyne receiver can be built such that an input signal representing a modulated EMR signal is received by a mixer 2000. The mixer 2000 also receives a signal from a local oscillator 2020. The mixer 2000 combines the input signal and the signal from the local oscillator 2020 to produce two beat frequencies representing the sum and the difference of the two signals. Typically the difference of the two signals is the signal of interest and termed the “intermediate frequency” or IF. The IF represents the signal that was added to the carrier wave on the transmitter side. Depending on the application, the IF may be applied to an intermediate frequency filter 2030 and/or an IF amplifier 2040. The resulting signal is then applied to a demodulator 2050 to produce the demodulated signal.
Using the techniques of FIG. 20, a heterodyne receiver 2150 that operates up to optical frequencies can be constructed, e.g., as shown in FIG. 21. As seen in FIG. 21, ultra-small resonant structures 12 respond to a modulated EMR signal 15, as described above. However, when the ultra-small resonant structures 12 are also in the presence of a local oscillating source of electromagnetic energy, the ultra-small resonant structures 12 (collectively referenced as 2125, e.g., in FIG. 22 a) resonate at the beat frequencies which are the sum and the difference of the modulated EMR signal 15 and the local EMR 2100 from the local oscillator 2020. By measuring at a detector 2175 (e.g., using a differential current with a differential current detector 16), the intermediate frequency corresponding to the difference of the modulated EMR signal 15 and the local EMR 2100 from the local oscillator 2020 (e.g., a laser or another EMR source such as is described in the above-referenced co-pending application entitled “Micro Free Electron Laser (FEL)”) can be determined. The intermediate frequency optionally can then be filtered and/or amplified, either using actual circuitry or via digital signal processing. The intermediate frequency or the amplified/filtered intermediate frequency can then be applied to a demodulator to obtain the signal that was modulated on the carrier wave at the transmitter.
In an alternate embodiment shown in FIGS. 22 a-22 c, the heterodyne receiver 2150 of FIG. 21 is modified to be a heterodyne receiver 2250 including plural local oscillators 2020 a-2020 c such that the local EMR 2100 can be selected to be one of a number of frequencies, depending on the how the receiver is tuned. For example, when used in conjunction with a multi-frequency transmitter, a multi-frequency receiver, as shown in FIGS. 22 a-22 c can first receive a signal modulated on a first carrier frequency by using oscillator 2020 a as the local oscillator (and blocking the outputs of local oscillators 2020 b and 2020 c) while orienting or deflecting the charged particle beam (e.g., using deflectors 2275) toward a resonant structure 2125 a with dimensions selected to receive the first carrier frequency. When attempting to receive a signal modulated on a second carrier frequency, the outputs of oscillators 2020 a and 2020 c can be blocked, and oscillator 2020 b can be used as the local oscillator while orienting or deflecting the charged particle beam (e.g., using deflectors 2275) toward a resonant structure 2125 b with dimensions selected to receive the second carrier frequency. Receipt of a signal carried on the third carrier signal works analogously using resonant structure 2125 c.
In yet another embodiment shown in FIG. 23, a heterodyne receiver 2350 can be constructed by replacing the plural local oscillators 2020 a-2020 c of FIGS. 22 a-22 c with a variable oscillator 2300. In this embodiment, the variable oscillator 2300 can be dynamically tuned to the frequency corresponding to the carrier frequency of the signal that is desired to be demodulated. Intel Corporation of California manufactures a tunable laser system which can be used as the variable oscillator by providing applying (e.g., via an optical interconnection such as fiber optic cable) the output of the laser to the resonant structure acting as a mixer.
In an alternate embodiment, the variable oscillator 2300 can instead be a series of other resonant structures which are excited by one or more charged particle beams. Which one of the series of resonant structures is selected may depend on an input to the variable oscillator 2300 where the input controls a deflector which varies an amount of deflection of the charged particle beam. Additional details of such a set of selectable resonant structures and their deflector can be found in co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 11/410,924, described in greater detail above. Such resonant structures may each include at least one corresponding filter to filter out frequencies other than the desired predominant frequency corresponding to the selected resonant structure. For example, if the deflector selects a first resonant structure to act as the oscillating frequency, that resonant structure may produce relatively small amounts of other, non-predominant frequencies. Thus, such a filter filters out the relatively small amounts of other, non-predominant frequencies.
As shown in FIG. 24, any one of the heterodyne receivers 2150/2250/2350 described above can be repeated within an array of receivers such that a signal to be received can be spatially resolved. Such a spatial resolution may be useful in applications such as image capture. In the array of receivers, the receivers may share a local oscillator which applies its output to each of the receivers 2150/2250/2350, or the array may include one local oscillator per receiver 2150/2250/2350. Alternatively, a subset (e.g., half) of the receivers 2150/2250/2350 may share one local oscillator with at least one other subset sharing at least one other local receiver.
As shown in FIG. 25, any one of the heterodyne receivers 2150/2250/2350 described above can be repeated within a matrix of receivers such that a signal to be received can be spatially resolved. (It should be understood that a matrix is still an array of receivers, but it is a two-dimensional array rather than a one-dimensional array.) In the matrix of receivers, the receivers may share a local oscillator which applies its output to each of the receivers 2150/2250/2350, or the matrix may include one local oscillator per receiver 2150/2250/2350. Alternatively, a subset (e.g., half) of the receivers 2150/2250/2350 may share one local oscillator with at least one other subset sharing at least one other local receiver. For example, each row or each column of the matrix may share a local oscillator.
In an environment in which a multi-frequency signal can be received in parts in quick succession, the matrix of FIG. 25 can be switched to receive each of the frequencies in succession. For example, in an imaging environment, the receivers 2150/2250/2350 may first be controlled to receive a red signal, then switched to receive a green signal, then switched to receive a blue signal, where the red, green and blue images are combined to form an RGB image.
As shown in FIG. 26, the heterodyne receivers 2150/2250/2350 described above can be repeated within a matrix of receivers such that a multi-frequency signal to be received can be spatially resolved simultaneously. To achieve this, a subset of the receivers 2150/2250/2350 may be dynamically dedicated to receive at a particular frequency that is different from its neighbor. For example, every third receiver 2150/2250/2350R may be switched to be dedicated to receiving a red signal, while a different group of every third receiver 2150/2250/2350G is switched to be dedicated to receiving a green signal, and the last group of every third receiver 2150/2250/2350B is switched to be dedicated to receiving a blue signal. By providing such a matrix, red, green and blue signals can be received simultaneously.
As shown in FIG. 27, in addition to the receivers 2150/2250/2350 for red, green and blue signals, other signals may also be received simultaneously with those signals. Such other signals may include any other signals that can be received by the ultra-small resonant structures described herein. Such signals may include infra-red or other terahertz signals which can be used in conjunction with or in place of visible imaging (e.g., when visible imaging is degraded or impossible due to environmental conditions). Alternatively, a configuration such as FIG. 25 could be augmented with an additional resonant structure such that the whole array could receive the non-visible signals. Thus, it is possible to trade-off simultaneous reception of multiple frequencies in parallel at a lower resolution for sequential reception of multiple frequencies at a higher resolution.
In embodiments which are used for imaging applications, additional optical devices, such as lens and deflectors may be required to focus the image onto an array or matrix of receivers. It is further possible to include an array or matrix of lens for use with the array or matrix of receivers such that a series of images with varying focal distances can be received in parallel by the array or matrix.
While certain configurations of structures have been illustrated for the purposes of presenting the basic structures of the present invention, one of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that other variations are possible which would still fall within the scope of the appended claims. While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiment, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiment, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
| 引用的專利 | 申請日期 | 發佈日期 | 申請者 | 專利名稱 |
|---|
| US1948384 | 1932年1月26日 | 1934年2月20日 | Rescarch Corporation | Method and apparatus for the acceleration of ions | | US2307086 | 1941年5月7日 | 1943年1月5日 | The Board Of Trustees Of The Leland Stanford Junior University | High frequency electrical apparatus | | US2431396 | 1942年12月21日 | 1947年11月25日 | Radio Corporation Of America | Current magnitude-ratio responsive amplifier | | US2473477 | 1946年7月24日 | 1949年6月14日 | Raythcon Manufacturing Company | Magnetic induction device | | US2634372 | | 1953年4月7日 | | 名稱不詳 | | US2932798 | 1956年1月5日 | 1960年4月12日 | Research Corporation | Imparting energy to charged particles | | US3571642 | 1968年1月17日 | 1971年3月23日 | Atomic Energy Of Canada Ltd. | Method and apparatus for interleaved charged particle acceleration | | US3761828 | 1970年12月10日 | 1973年9月25日 | J Us Pollard | Linear particle accelerator with coast through shield | | US3923568 | 1974年1月14日 | 1975年12月2日 | International Plasma Corporation | Dry plasma process for etching noble metal | | US3989347 | 1975年6月17日 | 1976年11月2日 | Siemens Aktiengesellschaft | Acousto-optical data input transducer with optical data storage and process for operation thereof | | US4282436 | 1980年6月4日 | 1981年8月4日 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy | Intense ion beam generation with an inverse reflex tetrode (IRT) | | US4482779 | 1983年4月19日 | 1984年11月13日 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Administrator Of National Aeronautics And Space Administration | Inelastic tunnel diodes | | US4727550 | 1985年9月19日 | 1988年2月23日 | Chang; David B. | Radiation source | | US4740973 | 1985年5月21日 | 1988年4月26日 | Bazin; Claude | Free electron laser | | US4746201 | 1978年1月16日 | 1988年5月24日 | Gould; Gordon | Polarizing apparatus employing an optical element inclined at brewster's angle | | US4829527 | 1984年4月23日 | 1989年5月9日 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army | Wideband electronic frequency tuning for orotrons | | US4838021 | 1987年12月11日 | 1989年6月13日 | Hughes Aircraft Company | Electrostatic ion thruster with improved thrust modulation | | US5023563 | 1990年9月24日 | 1991年6月11日 | Hughes Aircraft Company | Upshifted free electron laser amplifier | | US5157000 | 1991年2月8日 | 1992年10月20日 | Texas Instruments Incorporated | Method for dry etching openings in integrated circuit layers | | US5163118 | 1988年8月26日 | 1992年11月10日 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force | Lattice mismatched hetrostructure optical waveguide | | US5185073 | 1991年4月29日 | 1993年2月9日 | International Business Machines Corporation | Method of fabricating nendritic materials | | US5199918 | 1991年11月7日 | 1993年4月6日 | Microelectronics And Computer Technology Corporation | Method of forming field emitter device with diamond emission tips | | US5262656 | 1992年6月3日 | 1993年11月16日 | Thomson-Csf | Optical semiconductor transceiver with chemically resistant layers | | US5263043 | 1992年4月6日 | 1993年11月16日 | Trustees Of Dartmouth College | Free electron laser utilizing grating coupling | | US5268693 | 1992年8月19日 | 1993年12月7日 | Trustees Of Dartmouth College | Semiconductor film free electron laser | | US5268788 | 1992年6月12日 | 1993年12月7日 | Smiths Industries Public Limited Company | Display filter arrangements | | US5302240 | 1993年2月19日 | 1994年4月12日 | Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba | Method of manufacturing semiconductor device | | US5354709 | 1991年4月11日 | 1994年10月11日 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air Force | Method of making a lattice mismatched heterostructure optical waveguide | | US5446814 | 1994年12月13日 | 1995年8月29日 | Motorola | Molded reflective optical waveguide | | US5608263 | 1994年9月6日 | 1997年3月4日 | The Regents Of The University Of Michigan | Micromachined self packaged circuits for high-frequency applications | | US5668368 | 1996年5月2日 | 1997年9月16日 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Apparatus for suppressing electrification of sample in charged beam irradiation apparatus | | US5705443 | 1995年5月30日 | 1998年1月6日 | Advanced Technology Materials, Inc. | Etching method for refractory materials | | US5737458 | 1995年3月22日 | 1998年4月7日 | Martin Marietta Corporation | Optical light pipe and microwave waveguide interconnects in multichip modules formed using adaptive lithography | | US5744919 | 1996年12月12日 | 1998年4月28日 | Mishin; Andrey V. | CW particle accelerator with low particle injection velocity | | US5757009 | 1996年12月27日 | 1998年5月26日 | Northrop Grumman Corporation | Charged particle beam expander | | US5767013 | 1997年1月3日 | 1998年6月16日 | Lg Semicon Co., Ltd. | Method for forming interconnection in semiconductor pattern device | | US5790585 | 1996年11月12日 | 1998年8月4日 | The Trustees Of Dartmouth College | Grating coupling free electron laser apparatus and method | | US5811943 | 1996年9月23日 | 1998年9月22日 | Schonberg Research Corporation | Hollow-beam microwave linear accelerator | | US5821836 | 1997年5月23日 | 1998年10月13日 | The Regents Of The University Of Michigan | Miniaturized filter assembly | | US5821902 | 1995年9月28日 | 1998年10月13日 | Inmarsat | Folded dipole microstrip antenna | | US5831270 | 1997年2月18日 | 1998年11月3日 | Nikon Corporation | Magnetic deflectors and charged-particle-beam lithography systems incorporating same | | US5847745 | 1996年3月1日 | 1998年12月8日 | Futaba Denshi Kogyo K.K. | Optical write element | | US5889449 | 1995年12月7日 | 1999年3月30日 | Space Systems/Loral, Inc. | Electromagnetic transmission line elements having a boundary between materials of high and low dielectric constants | | US5902489 | 1996年11月8日 | 1999年5月11日 | Hitachi, Ltd. | Particle handling method by acoustic radiation force and apparatus therefore | | US6008496 | 1998年5月5日 | 1999年12月28日 | University Of Florida | High resolution resonance ionization imaging detector and method | | US6040625 | 1997年9月25日 | 2000年3月21日 | I/O Sensors, Inc. | Sensor package arrangement | | US6060833 | 1997年10月17日 | 2000年5月9日 | Velazco; Jose E. | Continuous rotating-wave electron beam accelerator | | US6080529 | 1998年10月19日 | 2000年6月27日 | Applied Materials, Inc. | Method of etching patterned layers useful as masking during subsequent etching or for damascene structures | | US6195199 | 1998年10月27日 | 2001年2月27日 | Kanazawa University | Electron tube type unidirectional optical amplifier | | US6222866 | 1997年12月29日 | 2001年4月24日 | Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. | Surface emitting semiconductor laser, its producing method and surface emitting semiconductor laser array | | US6281769 | 1998年12月8日 | 2001年8月28日 | Space Systems/Loral Inc. | Electromagnetic transmission line elements having a boundary between materials of high and low dielectric constants | | US6297511 | 1999年4月1日 | 2001年10月2日 | Raytheon Company | High frequency infrared emitter | | US6338968 | 1999年8月2日 | 2002年1月15日 | Signature Bioscience, Inc. | Method and apparatus for detecting molecular binding events | | US6370306 | 1998年12月15日 | 2002年4月9日 | Seiko Instruments Inc. | Optical waveguide probe and its manufacturing method | | US6373194 | 2000年6月1日 | 2002年4月16日 | Raytheon Company | Optical magnetron for high efficiency production of optical radiation | | US6376258 | 2000年1月10日 | 2002年4月23日 | Signature Bioscience, Inc. | Resonant bio-assay device and test system for detecting molecular binding events | | US6407516 | 2000年12月6日 | 2002年6月18日 | Exaconnect Inc. | Free space electron switch | | US6441298 | 2000年8月15日 | 2002年8月27日 | Nec Research Institute, Inc | Surface-plasmon enhanced photovoltaic device | | US6504303 | 2001年3月1日 | 2003年1月7日 | Raytheon Company | Optical magnetron for high efficiency production of optical radiation, and 1/2λ induced pi-mode operation | | US6545425 | 2001年7月3日 | 2003年4月8日 | Exaconnect Corp. | Use of a free space electron switch in a telecommunications network | | US6577040 | 2001年4月20日 | 2003年6月10日 | The Regents Of The University Of Michigan | Method and apparatus for generating a signal having at least one desired output frequency utilizing a bank of vibrating micromechanical devices | | US6603915 | 2001年2月5日 | 2003年8月5日 | Fujitsu Limited | Interposer and method for producing a light-guiding structure | | US6624916 | 1998年2月11日 | 2003年9月23日 | Quantumbeam Limited | Signalling system | | US6636653 | 2001年2月2日 | 2003年10月21日 | Teravicta Technologies, Inc. | Integrated optical micro-electromechanical systems and methods of fabricating and operating the same | | US6642907 | 2002年1月9日 | 2003年11月4日 | The Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd. | Antenna device | | US6738176 | 2002年4月30日 | 2004年5月18日 | Mark Davidson | Dynamic multi-wavelength switching ensemble | | US6741781 | 2001年9月25日 | 2004年5月25日 | Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba | Optical interconnection circuit board and manufacturing method thereof | | US6782205 | 2002年1月15日 | 2004年8月24日 | Silicon Light Machines | Method and apparatus for dynamic equalization in wavelength division multiplexing | | US6791438 | 2002年10月28日 | 2004年9月14日 | Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. | Radio frequency module and method for manufacturing the same | | US6829286 | 2002年5月1日 | 2004年12月7日 | Opticomp Corporation | Resonant cavity enhanced VCSEL/waveguide grating coupler | | US6834152 | 2002年9月9日 | 2004年12月21日 | California Institute Of Technology | Strip loaded waveguide with low-index transition layer | | US6870438 | 2000年11月10日 | 2005年3月22日 | Kyocera Corporation | Multi-layered wiring board for slot coupling a transmission line to a waveguide | | US6885262 | 2003年10月30日 | 2005年4月26日 | Ube Industries, Ltd. | Band-pass filter using film bulk acoustic resonator | | US6909092 | 2003年5月15日 | 2005年6月21日 | Ebara Corporation | Electron beam apparatus and device manufacturing method using same | | US6909104 | 2000年5月10日 | 2005年6月21日 | Nawotec Gmbh | Miniaturized terahertz radiation source | | US6944369 | 2002年2月12日 | 2005年9月13日 | Sioptical, Inc. | Optical coupler having evanescent coupling region | | US6953291 | 2003年6月30日 | 2005年10月11日 | Finisar Corporation | Compact package design for vertical cavity surface emitting laser array to optical fiber cable connection | | US6965625 | 2001年9月24日 | 2005年11月15日 | Vermont Photonics, Inc. | Apparatuses and methods for generating coherent electromagnetic laser radiation | | US6995406 | 2003年6月6日 | 2006年2月7日 | Shinichi Ansai | Multibeam semiconductor laser, semiconductor light-emitting device and semiconductor device | | US7010183 | 2002年3月20日 | 2006年3月7日 | The Regents Of The University Of Colorado | Surface plasmon devices | | US7092588 | 2003年10月23日 | 2006年8月15日 | Seiko Epson Corporation | Optical interconnection circuit between chips, electrooptical device and electronic equipment | | US7092603 | 2004年3月3日 | 2006年8月15日 | Fujitsu Limited | Optical bridge for chip-to-board interconnection and methods of fabrication | | US7122978 | 2005年4月19日 | 2006年10月17日 | Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha | Charged-particle beam accelerator, particle beam radiation therapy system using the charged-particle beam accelerator, and method of operating the particle beam radiation therapy system | | US7177515 | 2002年5月6日 | 2007年2月13日 | The Regents Of The University Of Colorado | Surface plasmon devices | | US20010025925 | 2001年3月26日 | 2001年10月4日 | Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba | Charged particle beam system and pattern slant observing method | | US20020009723 | 2000年1月10日 | 2002年1月24日 | John Hefti | Resonant bio-assay device and test system for detecting molecular binding events | | US20020027481 | 2000年12月27日 | 2002年3月7日 | Fiedziuszko Slawomir J. | Electromagnetic transmission line elements having a boundary between materials of high and low dielectric constants | | US20020053638 | 1999年6月29日 | 2002年5月9日 | Dieter Winkler | Apparatus and method for examing specimen with a charged particle beam | | US20020135665 | 2002年3月20日 | 2002年9月26日 | Keith Gardner | Led print head for electrophotographic printer | | US20030012925 | 2001年7月16日 | 2003年1月16日 | Motorola, Inc. | Process for fabricating semiconductor structures and devices utilizing the formation of a compliant substrate for materials used to form the same and including an etch stop layer used for back side processing | | US20030016412 | 2002年7月15日 | 2003年1月23日 | Alcatel | Monitoring unit for optical burst mode signals | | US20030016421 | 2002年8月30日 | 2003年1月23日 | Small James G. | Wireless communication system with high efficiency/high power optical source | | US20030034535 | 2001年8月15日 | 2003年2月20日 | Motorola, Inc. | Mems devices suitable for integration with chip having integrated silicon and compound semiconductor devices, and methods for fabricating such devices | | US20030155521 | 2001年1月29日 | 2003年8月21日 | Hans-Peter Feuerbaum | Optical column for charged particle beam device | | US20030164947 | 2001年4月13日 | 2003年9月4日 | Matthias Vaupel | Spr sensor | | US20030179974 | 2002年3月20日 | 2003年9月25日 | Estes Michael J. | Surface plasmon devices | | US20030206708 | 2002年5月6日 | 2003年11月6日 | Estes Michael J. | Surface plasmon devices | | US20040061053 | 2001年2月28日 | 2004年4月1日 | Mikio Ichihashi | Method and apparatus for measuring physical properties of micro region | | US20040108473 | 2003年4月8日 | 2004年6月10日 | Melnychuk Stephan T. | Extreme ultraviolet light source | | US20060216940 * | 2006年5月15日 | 2006年9月28日 | Virgin Islands Microsystems, Inc. | Methods of producing structures for electron beam induced resonance using plating and/or etching |
| 參考文獻 |
|---|
| 1 | | "Antenna Arrays." May 18, 2002. www.tpub.com/content/neets/14183/css/14183<SUB>-</SUB>159.htm. | | 2 | | "Array of Nanoklystrons for Frequency Agility or Redundancy," NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, NASA Tech Briefs, NPO-21033. 2001. | | 3 | | "Diffraction Grating," hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/phyopt/grating.html. | | 4 | | "Hardware Development Programs," Calabazas Creek Research, Inc. found at http://calcreek.com/hardware.html. | | 5 | | Alford, T.L. et al., "Advanced silver-based metallization patterning for ULSI applications," Microelectronic Engineering 55, 2001, pp. 383-388, Elsevier Science B.V. | | 6 | | Amato, Ivan, "An Everyman's Free-Electron Laser?" Science, New Series, Oct. 16, 1992, p. 401, vol. 258 No. 5081, American Association for the Advancement of Science. | | 7 | | Andrews, H.L. et al., "Dispersion and Attenuation in a Smith-Purcell Free Electron Laser," The American Physical Society, Physical Review Special Topics-Accelerators and Beams 8 (2005), pp. 050703-1-050703-9. | | 8 | | Backe, H. et al. "Investigation of Far-Infrared Smith-Purcell Radiation at the 3.41 MeV Electron Injector Linac of the Mainz Microtron MAMI," Institut fur Kernphysik, Universitat Mainz, D-55099, Mainz Germany. | | 9 | | Bakhtyari, A. et al., "Horn Resonator Boosts Miniature Free-Electron Laser Power," Applied Physics Letters, May 12, 2003, pp. 3150-3152, vol. 82, No. 19, American Institute of Physics. | | 10 | | Bakhtyari, Dr. Arash, "Gain Mechanism in a Smith-Purcell MicroFEL," Abstract, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College. | | 11 | | Bhattacharjee, Sudeep et al., "Folded Waveguide Traveling-Wave Tube Sources for Terahertz Radiation." IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, vol. 32. No. 3, Jun. 2004, pp. 1002-1014. | | 12 | | Booske, J.H. et al., "Microfabricated TWTs as High Power, Wideband Sources of THz Radiation". | | 13 | | Brau, C.A. et al., "Gain and Coherent Radiation from a Smith-Purcell Free Electron Laser," Proceedings of the 2004 FEL Conference, pp. 278-281. | | 14 | | Brownell, J.H. et al., "Improved muFEL Performance with Novel Resonator," Jan. 7, 2005, from website: www.frascati.enea.it/thz-bridge/workshop/presentations/Wednesday/We-07-Brownell.ppt. | | 15 | | Brownell, J.H. et al., "The Angular Distribution of the Power Produced by Smith-Purcell Radiation," J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 1997, pp. 2478-2481, vol. 30, IOP Publishing Ltd., United Kingdom. | | 16 | | Chuang, S.L. et al., "Enhancement of Smith-Purcell Radiation from a Grating with Surface-Plasmon Excitation," Journal of the Optical Society of America, Jun. 1984, pp. 672-676, vol. 1 No. 6, Optical Society of America. | | 17 | | Chuang, S.L. et al., "Smith-Purcell Radiation from a Charge Moving Above a Penetrable Grating," IEEE MTT-S Digest, 1983, pp. 405-406, IEEE. | | 18 | | Far-IR, Sub-MM & MM Detector Technology Workshop list of manuscripts, session 6 2002. | | 19 | | Feltz, W.F. et al., "Near-Continuous Profiling of Temperature, Moisture, and Atmospheric Stability Using the Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer (AERI)," Journal of Applied Meteorology, May 2003, vol. 42 No. 5, H.W. Wilson Company, pp. 584-597. | | 20 | | Freund, H.P. et al., "Linearized Field Theory of a Smith-Purcell Traveling Wave Tube," IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, Jun. 2004, pp. 1015-1027, vol. 32 No. 3, IEEE. | | 21 | | Gallerano, G.P. et al., "Overview of Terahertz Radiation Sources," Proceedings of the 2004 FEL Conference, pp. 216-221. | | 22 | | Goldstein, M. et al., "Demonstration of a Micro Far-Infrared Smith-Purcell Emitter," Applied Physics Letters, Jul. 28, 1997, pp. 452-454, vol. 71 No. 4, American Institute of Physics. | | 23 | | Gover, A. et al., "Angular Radiation Pattern of Smith-Purcell Radiation," Journal of the Optical Society of America, Oct. 1984, pp. 723-728, vol. 1 No. 5, Optical Society of America. | | 24 | | Grishin, Yu. A. et al., "Pulsed Orotron-A New Microwave Source for Submillimeter Pulse High-Field Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Spectroscopy," Review of Scientific Instruments, Sep. 2004, pp. 2926-2936, vol. 75 No. 9, American Institute of Physics. | | 25 | | International Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Nov. 23, 2007 in International Application No. PCT/US2006/022786. | | 26 | | Ishizuka, H. et al., "Smith-Purcell Experiment Utilizing a Field-Emitter Array Cathode: Measurements of Radiation," Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, 2001, pp. 593-598, A 475, Elsevier Science B.V. | | 27 | | Ishizuka, H. et al., "Smith-Purcell Radiation Experiment Using a Field-Emission Array Cathode," Nuclear Instuments and Methods in Physics Research, 2000, pp. 276-280, A 445, Elsevier Science B.V. | | 28 | | Ives, Lawrence et al., "Development of Backward Wave Oscillators for Terahertz Applications," Terahertz for Military and Security Applications, Proceedings of SPIE vol. 5070 (2003), pp. 71-82. | | 29 | | Ives, R. Lawrence, "IVEC Summary, Session 2, Sources I" 2002. | | 30 | | Jonietz, Erika, "Nano Antenna Gold nanospheres show path to all-optical computing," Technology Review, Dec. 2005/Jan. 2006, p. 32. | | 31 | | Joo, Youngcheol et al., "Air Cooling of IC Chip with Novel Microchannels Monolithically Formed on Chip Front Surface," Cooling and Thermal Design of Electronic Systems (HTD-vol. 319 & EEP-vol. 15), International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, San Francisco, CA Nov. 1995 pp. 117-121. | | 32 | | Joo, Youngcheol et al., "Fabrication of Monolithic Microchannels for IC Chip Cooling," 1995, Mechanical, Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering Department, University of California at Los Angeles. | | 33 | | Jung, K.B. et al., "Patterning of Cu, Co, Fe, and Ag for magnetic nanostructures," J. Vac. Sci. Technol. A 15(3), May/Jun. 1997, pp. 1780-1784. | | 34 | | Kapp, Oscar H. et al., "Modification of a Scanning Electron Microscope to Produce Smith-Purcell Radiation," Review of Scientific Instruments, Nov. 2004, pp. 4732-4741, vol. 75 No. 11, American Institute of Physics. | | 35 | | Kiener, C. et al., "Investigation of the Mean Free Path of Hot Electrons in GaAs/AlGaAs Heterostructures," Semicond. Sci. Technol., 1994, pp. 193-197, vol. 9, IOP Publishing Ltd., United Kingdom. | | 36 | | Kim, Shang Hoon, "Quantum Mechanical Theory fo Free-Electron Two-Quantum Stark Emission Driven by Transverse Motion," Journal of the Physical Society of Japan, Aug. 1993, vol. 62 No. 8, pp. 2528-2532. | | 37 | | Korbly, S.E. et al., "Progress on a Smith-Purcell Radiation Bunch Length Diagnostic," Plasma Science and Fusion Center, MIT, Cambridge, MA. | | 38 | | Kormann, T. et al., "A Photoelectron Source for the Study of Smith-Purcell Radiation". | | 39 | | Kube, G. et al., "Observation of Optical Smith-Purcell Radiation at an Electron Beam Energy of 855 MeV," Physical Review E, May 8, 2002, vol. 65, The American Physical Society, pp. 056501-1-056501-15. | | 40 | | Lee Kwang-Cheol et al., "Deep X-Ray Mask with Integrated Actuator for 3D Microfabrication", Conference: Pacific Rim Workshop on Transducers and Micro/Nano Technologies, (Xiamen CHN), Jul. 22, 2002. | | 41 | | Liu, Chuan Sheng, et al., "Stimulated Coherent Smith-Purcell Radiation from a Metallic Grating," IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, Oct. 1999, pp. 1386-1389, vol. 35, No. 10, IEEE. | | 42 | | Manohara, Harish et al., "Field Emission Testing of Carbon Nanotubes for THz Frequency Vacuum Microtube Sources." Abstract. Dec. 2003. from SPIEWeb. | | 43 | | Manohara, Harish M. et al., "Design and Fabrication of a THz Nanoklystron" (www.sofia.usra.edu/det<SUB>-</SUB>workshop/ posters/session 3/3-43manohara<SUB>-</SUB>poster.pdf), PowerPoint Presentation. | | 44 | | Manohara, Harish M. et al., "Design and Fabrication of a THz Nanoklystron". | | 45 | | Markoff, John, "A Chip That Can Transfer Data Using Laser Light," The New York Times, Sep. 18, 2006. | | 46 | | McDaniel, James C. et al., "Smith-Purcell Radiation in the High Conductivity and Plasma Frequency Limits," Applied Optics, Nov. 15, 1989, pp. 4924-4929, vol. 28 No. 22, Optical Society of America. | | 47 | | Meyer, Stephan, "Far IR, Sum-MM & MM Detector Technology Workshop Summary," Oct. 2002. (may date the Manohara documents). | | 48 | | Mokhoff, Nicolas, "Optical-speed light detector promises fast space talk," EETimes Online, Mar. 20, 2006, from website: www.eetimes.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=183701047. | | 49 | | Nguyen, Phucanh et al., "Novel technique to pattern silver using CF4 and CF4/O2 glow discharges," J.Vac. Sci. Technol. B 19(1), Jan./Feb. 2001, American Vacuum Society, pp. 158-165. | | 50 | | Nguyen, Phucanh et al., "Reactive ion etch of patterned and blanket silver thin films in CI2/O2 and O2 glow discharges," J. Vac. Sci, Technol. B. 17 (5), Sep./Oct. 1999, American Vacuum Society, pp. 2204-2209. | | 51 | | Ohtaka, Kazuo, "Smith-Purcell Radiation from Metallic and Dielectric Photonic Crystals," Center for Frontier Science, pp. 272-273, Chiba University, 1-33 Yayoi, Inage-ku, Chiba-shi, Japan. | | 52 | | Phototonics Research, "Surface-Plasmon-Enhanced Random Laser Demonstrated," Phototonics Spectra, Feb. 2005, pp. 112-113. | | 53 | | Platt, C.L. et al., "A New Resonator Design for Smith-Purcell Free Electron Lasers," 6Q19, p. 296. | | 54 | | Potylitsin, A.P., "Resonant Diffraction Radiation and Smith-Purcell Effect," (Abstract), arXiv: physics/9803043 v2 Apr. 13, 1998. | | 55 | | Potylitsyn, A.P., "Resonant Diffraction Radiation and Smith-Purcell Effect," Physics Letters A, Feb. 2, 1998, pp. 112-116, A 238, Elsevier Science B.V. | | 56 | | S. Hoogland et al., "A solution-processed 1.53 mum quantum dot laser with temperature-invariant emission wavelength," Optics Express, vol. 14, No. 8, Apr. 17, 2006, pp. 3273-3281. | | 57 | | S.M. Sze, "Semiconductor Devices Physics and Technology", 2nd Edition, Chapters 9 and 12, Copyright 1985, 2002. | | 58 | | Savilov, Andrey V., "Stimulated Wave Scattering in the Smith-Purcell FEL," IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science, Oct. 2001, pp. 820-823, vol. 29 No. 5, IEEE. | | 59 | | Schachter, Levi et al., "Smith-Purcell Oscillator in an Exponential Gain Regime," Journal of Applied Physics, Apr. 15, 1989, pp. 3267-3269, vol. 65 No. 8, American Institute of Physics. | | 60 | | Schachter, Levi, "Influence of the Guiding Magnetic Field on the Performance of a Smith-Purcell Amplifier Operating in the Weak Compton Regime," Journal of the Optical Society of America, May 1990, pp. 873-876, vol. 7 No. 5, Optical Society of America. | | 61 | | Schachter, Levi, "The Influence of the Guided Magnetic Field on the Performance of a Smith-Purcell Amplifier Operating In the Strong Compton Regime," Journal of Applied Physics, Apr. 15, 1990, pp. 3582-3592, vol. 67 No. 8, American Institute of Physics. | | 62 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Aug. 24, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022768. | | 63 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Aug. 31, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022680. | | 64 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Feb. 12, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022682. | | 65 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Feb. 20, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022676. | | 66 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Feb. 20, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022772. | | 67 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Feb. 20, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022780. | | 68 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Feb. 21, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022684. | | 69 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Jan. 17, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022777. | | 70 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Jan. 23, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022781. | | 71 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Jul. 16, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022774. | | 72 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Jul. 20, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/024216. | | 73 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Jul. 26, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022776. | | 74 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Jun. 20, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022779. | | 75 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Mar. 7, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022775. | | 76 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Oct. 25, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022687. | | 77 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Oct. 26, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022675. | | 78 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Sep. 12, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022767. | | 79 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Sep. 13, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/024217. | | 80 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Sep. 17, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022689. | | 81 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Sep. 17, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022787. | | 82 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Sep. 21, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/022688. | | 83 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Sep. 25, 2007 in PCT appln. No. PCT/US2006/022681. | | 84 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Sep. 26, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/024218. | | 85 | | Search Report and Written Opinion mailed Sep. 5, 2007 in PCT Appln. No. PCT/US2006/027428. | | 86 | | Shih, I. et al., "Experimental Investigations of Smith-Purcell Radiation," Journal of the Optical Society of America, Mar. 1990, pp. 351-356, vol. 7, No. 3, Optical Society of America. | | 87 | | Shih, I. et al., "Measurements of the Smith-Purcell Radiation," Journal of the Optical Society of America, Mar. 1990, pp. 345-350, vol. 7 No. 3, Optical Society of America. | | 88 | | Speller et al., "A Low-Noise MEMS Accelerometer for Unattended Ground Sensor Applications", Applied MEMS Inc., 12200 Parc Crest, Stafford, TX, USA 77477. | | 89 | | Swartz, J.C. et al., "THz-FIR Grating Coupled Radiation Source," Plasma Science, 1998. 1D02, p. 126. | | 90 | | Temkin, Richard, "Scanning with Ease Through the Far Infrared," Science, New Series, May 8, 1998, p. 854, vol. 280, No. 5365, American Association for the Advancement of Science. | | 91 | | Thurn-Albrecht et al., "Ultrahigh-Density Nanowire Arrays Grown in Self-Assembled Diblock Copolymer Templates", Science 290.5499, Dec. 15, 2000, pp. 2126-2129. | | 92 | | Walsh, J.E., et al., 1999. From website: http://www.ieee.org/organizations/pubs/newsletters/leos/feb99/hot2.htm. | | 93 | | Wentworth, Stuart M. et al., "Far-Infrared Composite Microbolometers," IEEE MTT-S Digest, 1990, pp. 1309-1310. | | 94 | | Yamamoto, N. et al., "Photon Emission From Silver Particles Induced by a High-Energy Electron Beam," Physical Review B, Nov. 6, 2001, pp. 205419-1-205419-9, vol. 64, the American Physical Society. | | 95 | | Yokoo, K. et al., "Smith-Purcell Radiation at Optical Wavelength Using a Field-Emitter Array," Technical Digest of IVMC, 2003, pp. 77-78. | | 96 | | Zeng, Yuxiao et al., "Processing and encapsulation of silver patterns by using reactive ion etch and ammonia anneal," Materials Chemistry and Physics 66, 2000, pp. 77-82. |
| 引用本專利 | 申請日期 | 發佈日期 | 申請者 | 專利名稱 |
|---|
| US7557647 * | 2006年5月5日 | 2009年7月7日 | Virgin Islands Microsystems, Inc. | Heterodyne receiver using resonant structures | | US8120014 * | 2005年12月15日 | 2012年2月21日 | Drexel University | Nanowire based plasmonics |
|